China to join ASEAN sea talks | The Phnom Penh Post
Shane Worrell and Cheang Sokha, 10 July 2012 
China may not be in ASEAN, but it’s looking more and more like an 
honorary member – at least where the South China Sea is concerned.
ASEAN
 foreign ministers yesterday took a significant step towards involving 
the burgeoning superpower in South China Sea discussions, adopting key 
elements of a Code of Conduct on behaviour in the disputed waters.
Kao
 Kim Hourn, secretary of state at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said 
ASEAN was now ready to meet with China over the long-awaited document 
that would be for “11 parties, not just ASEAN”.
“At the first 
meeting [on Sunday], they [senior officials] agreed that to work on the 
Code of Conduct ... ASEAN will meet with China to discuss the code of 
conduct from now on,” he said. “It is ASEAN and China.”
Senior officials, including some from China, would be involved in the final wording of the CoC, he said.
China,
 Taiwan and ASEAN members the Philippines, Brunei, Vietnam and Malaysia 
have all made claims on the resource-rich waters that have become a 
powder keg under the ASEAN chairmanship of China’s close ally Cambodia.
Anxieties about the CoC have intensified this year as activities in the waters increased.
In 2002, ASEAN members and China agreed on a Declaration of the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea (DoC), but it was never fully implemented.
Yesterday’s
 announcement came just hours after Prime Minister Hun Sen officially 
launched this week’s ASEAN meetings, which included yesterday’s 45th ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting, in front of hundreds at the Peace Palace in Phnom Penh.
During
 his opening address, the Prime Minister said ASEAN “should give 
emphasis to the implementation of the DoC, including the eventual 
conclusion of [a CoC]”.
ASEAN secretary-general Surin Pitsuwan 
acknowledged yesterday there had been “rising interest” since the ASEAN 
regional forum in Hanoi in 2010.
“I think this has something to 
do with the heightened attention to the issue and the realisation and 
awareness that the region must be able to show the international 
community that it is manageable and we are trying to manage it in the 
best possible way,” Pitsuwan said.
The Chinese Embassy in Phnom 
Penh released a statement underscoring its commitment to implementing 
the DoC, adding that it had been engaged in “informal discussion” on how
 to “jointly formulate a code of conduct in the South China Sea”.
 To contact the reporters on this story: Shane Worrell at shane.worrell@phnompenhpost.com
Cheang Sokha at sokha.cheang@phnompenhpost.com
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